Your Financial Statements: What Every Entrepreneur Must Know

Posted by Pierre de la Fortune on August 16, 2015 @ 12:01 a.m.

Written by Guest Author

As you consider which legal entity or entities–corporation, limited liability company, or limited partnership–you want to use for your business structure, the decisions you make will depend heavily on your current financial situation, both personal and professional. But do you know how to read a financial statement on your own? Do you know how to read your own personal and business financial statements? Knowing this is an essential skill for every entrepreneur.
As you consider which legal entity or entities–corporation, limited liability company, or limited partnership–you want to use for your business structure, the decisions you make will depend heavily on your current financial situation, both personal and professional. But do you know how to read a financial statement on your own? Do you know how to read your own personal and business financial statements?
Knowing how to do this is an essential skill not just for entrepreneurs but for everyone. However, for the entrepreneur having this skill can mean the difference between having a thriving business that continues to thrive and winding up in bankruptcy. The annals of the bankruptcy courts are strewn with cases of entrepreneurs who entrusted their accounting to others and, not knowing how to read the financial statements of their own businesses, were surprised when they found that the business was ultimately unsustainable. The purpose of this article is to help prevent this from happening to you–and to arm you with the skills you need to structure your business to your benefit from the outset.

Your Two Major Financial Statements

There are two major financial statements that every entrepreneur should know how to read and (ideally) prepare or have prepared in their financial software (we recommend QuickBooks):

The Income Statement

The Income Statement (also known as the P&L or Profit and Loss Statement) offers a dynamic picture of the ebb and flow of your finances. Briefly, income statement shows first: A. Your various sources of income Then subtracts from that, B. Your expenses To give you the net result: Net Profit or Loss Typically, it is the result shown on this statement that is the basis for your taxation by state and federal authorities at the end of the year. The net income or loss (revenue outgo) is carried over onto your second major financial statement: The Balance Sheet.

The Balance Sheet

Offers you a snapshot of cumulative results of your financial activities. It is made up of two columns: On the left side you have your Assets
On the right are listed your Liabilities and Owners/Shareholders Equity (or ownership in the business). The two columns must be in balance, which is why this is called a Balance Sheet.

Assets=Liabilities Equity

It’s really quite logical how the Income Statement and Balance Sheet relate to one another.

If you have to use current or long-term assets to pay ongoing expenses during the current year, at the end of the year, the amount of your assets will be reduced by the amount of net loss. On the right hand side, your Equity has gone down too. If you borrowed, say $10,000 to pay current operating expenses, at year end, your assets remain the same, but your liabilities have increased by $10,000, lowering your net Equity or ownership in the company by that same $10,000.
It doesn’t take a rocket scientist to figure out that if you continue on this path, you will quickly be in a very painful situation, because Liabilities carry their own cost. The cost of borrowing money is Interest, and if you are fortunate enough to borrow at only 10% interest (on unsecured debt) today, a year from now, you will have to pay $11,000 to pay off the original $10,000 debt. This reduces your equity still further–unless you have used the borrowed funds to create more assets that increase in value at the same rate as the interest on your debt or, better yet–at a higher rate.

For more info please visit: http://www.ozsmallbiz.net/your-financial-statements-what-every-entrepreneur-must-know/

¥Õ¥§¥ó¥Ç¥£ Ø”²¼ ¥¨¥¯¥»¥ë

catalogo hogan rebel 2013

You actually make it appear so easy together with your presentation however I to find this matter to be really one thing which I believe I might by no means understand. It kind of feels too complex and extremely wide for me. I am taking a look forward in

hogan 2013 invernali

You actually make it appear so easy with your presentation but I to find this matter to be actually one thing that I feel I would by no means understand. It kind of feels too complicated and extremely extensive for me. I'm taking a look ahead for your nex

asics colorado 85 review

You really make it seem really easy together with your presentation however I to find this matter to be really something which I believe I might never understand. It sort of feels too complicated and very wide for me. I am having a look forward for your n

scarpe modello hogan altre marche

You really make it appear really easy along with your presentation however I in finding this matter to be actually one thing which I believe I might by no means understand. It kind of feels too complicated and very vast for me. I'm looking forward in your